Author
Topic: DONE: Create Shortcut on the Destop (hopefully not as stupid as it sounds) (Read 9012 times)

It would be very helpful to have an autohotkey script which sends a shortcut to the desktop.

In other words, if a file is highlighted in Windows Explorer and I run the script (i.e. run the script in FARR) , it will create a shorcut on the destop. I realize that I can right click on the file and use SendTo in the context menu but this process is very, very slow on my machine.

Would that really be faster than right-click dragging a file onto the desktop which offers creating a shortcut as an option?

Alternatively if you browse the the Send to folder (copy and paste "%APPDATA%\Microsoft\Windows\SendTo" in an explorer window address bar) you can make copies of the "Desktop (create shortcut)" shortcut anywhere you like and dropping files from explorer onto that shortcut makes desktop shortcuts.

Also I'd really recommend looking into why your send to menu is so slow.

Eóin: When I right click on a file, it takes approximately 5 seconds for the context menu to open. Any idea why this would happen. I have a 2-yr old Dell lap top with decent processor and 2 gig RAM running with Windows XP .

PhilB66: Thanks for the suggestions but they do not do what I am looking for. All of them involve using context menu or multiple steps which is what am trying to avoid.

jdd, you probably have a slow or buggy shell extension installed. Try using the excellent ShellExView to disable them and then re enable one by one until you identify the culprit. If you sort by type you can probably just concentrate on the context menu ones.

Note after you disable/enable an extension you need to restart explorer.exe. One way to do so is kill the process through taskmanager and then still in taskmanger chose New task and type explorer. There may also be an easier way someone here knows

That is an ahk script.the line: "Formatted for AutoIt with the GeSHI Syntax Highlighter v1.0.8.4 [copy or print]"is a little misleading.If you click on the word "copy" in that line you'll be able to transfer the script to your own machine, naming it what you like.

I'd be quick to take Eóin's advice, you almost certainly have a 'bad' shell extension. Finding and removing that will make your computer days a lot less annoying.

Note after you disable/enable an extension you need to restart explorer.exe. One way to do so is kill the process through taskmanager and then still in taskmanger chose New task and type explorer. There may also be an easier way someone here knows

Unpack that to your FARR Installed or MyCustom folder and type goreload into FARR. The default alias is ds and the application is designed to activate the last active window before FARR. In other words, focus your Explorer (or any file manager) window, make your selection, activate FARR, type ds, and press enter. Shortcuts of your selection should appear on the desktop. Let me know how it works out for you. Thanks.

It works in Windows Explorer but not my preferred file manager which is XPlorer2. When I try it in XPlorer2, it maximizes my browser (Firefox), and pops open an error message that says "The clipboard timed out".

DONE: Create Shortcut on the Destop (hopefully not as stupid as it sounds)

I downloaded and installed Xplorer2 and it works fine here. However, I've uploaded a new version that allows you to specify the clipboard timeout amount. Re-download using the same URL and you can now adjust the timeout like this in your alias:

You can change that 5 (timeout in seconds) to whatever number will work on your system. You may have to experiment a little. As for Firefox maximising, I have no idea. I am running Firefox as well and haven't seen that behaviour.

Eóin: When I right click on a file, it takes approximately 5 seconds for the context menu to open. Any idea why this would happen. I have a 2-yr old Dell lap top with decent processor and 2 gig RAM running with Windows XP .

Take Eóin's advice, and if you are still having issues with it, read on...

A lot of software likes to stick entries on that SendTo menu (and the "New" menu), and the more stuff you have there the longer it takes to show the menu.

Might want to clean it up if that happens to be your issue.

There is lots of stuff you will never use and cleaning it up not only makes it faster, it makes it easier to find the entry on the menu that you are looking for. Just make sure you are not deleting any of the original stuff.

Keep these (yours may or may not have those odd file extensions showing, depending on how your system is configured):

Compressed (zipped) Folder.ZFSendToTarget

Desktop (create shortcut).DeskLink

desktop.ini

Mail Recipient.MAPIMail

My Documents.mydocs

(this is from XP, there may be more with Vista/Win7)

Another thing that could cause it to be slow is an issue with one or more of your drives (very large single partition external drives are great for causing this), or having an unusually large number of drive letters it will have to add to the menu. (If you are up to W like I am, you'll be waiting a little bit for that SendTo menu to show)